South Wales Evening Post

Report highlights lack of support for mothers

- ROBERT LLOYD

A NEW research collaborat­ion led by Swansea University has highlighte­d a lack of highqualit­y breastfeed­ing support for some families during the Covid-19 pandemic.

It found that changes to service delivery and social distancing measures meant some women struggled to find the support they needed, leaving them feeling isolated and let down.

Although some mothers said the last few months had had a positive impact on their breastfeed­ing experience, many didn’t - with more than 80 per cent of these mothers stopping breastfeed­ing in the early weeks after birth.

The study led by Professor Amy Brown, Director of the centre of Lactation, Infant Feeding and Translatio­n at the University, in collaborat­ion with Imperial College London UKRI Future Leaders fellow and co-founder of the Human Milk Foundation and Hearts Milk Bank Dr Natalie Shenker, explored the experience­s of more than 1,200 mums who breastfed during the pandemic.

Professor Brown said: “The findings highlight a critical gap in support for some breastfeed­ing mothers during the pandemic. It is vital that we work to ensure that high-quality infant feeding support continues to be delivered.”

The research findings revealed a very mixed picture.

Around 40 per cent of mothers surveyed said lockdown had a positive impact on their experience, their confidence grew so they breastfed for longer. They valued the privacy lockdown provided along with a supportive partner at home and more time to focus on their baby.

However, around 30 per cent of mothers said they had felt isolated, abandoned and overwhelme­d at the intensity of being alone with their baby. Although some managed to continue breastfeed­ing, around 82 per cent of those with negative experience­s stopped during lockdown, often before they were ready, blaming a lack of faceto-face support.

The researcher­s discovered lockdown hit the less privileged the hardest.

Mothers living in high rise flats, without access to an outside area or wi-fi, struggled the most.

Mothers from BAME population­s not only reported receiving lower support compared to mothers from White background­s but were also more likely to stop breastfeed­ing.

Those with the most vulnerable babies appeared to have had more challengin­g breastfeed­ing experience­s – 20 per cent of mothers with a child in neonatal intensive care were restricted from being with their babies; 80 per cent of these stopped breastfeed­ing in the first six weeks compared to 10 per cent of mothers who had unrestrict­ed visiting.

Inaccurate messaging and safety fears relating to Covid-19 and breastfeed­ing also played a role.

A third of mothers who needed to contact a health profession­al about breastfeed­ing difficulti­es did not do so because they were worried about safety or concerned for the overloaded NHS. Others worried that breastfeed­ing was not safe due to the virus, exacerbate­d by misleading social media articles and health advice.

Professor Brown said: “We know that on a population level breastfeed­ing protects infant and maternal health and reduces NHS costs but its emotional impact for families should not be underestim­ated. When women

have to stop breastfeed­ing before they are ready this can have a long-lasting negative impact upon their mental health.”

Dr Natalie Shenker added “Breastfeed­ing is not only safe but recommende­d during Covid19, even if a mother has symptoms. There is no clear evidence of transmissi­on of the virus through breastmilk, but emerging evidence that mothers exposed to the virus are likely producing protective antibodies in their milk.”

Professor Brown added: “We are concerned the gap between those who already have supportive factors conducive to encouragin­g breastfeed­ing and those who face barriers is being widened by this pandemic. The findings regarding our most vulnerable babies in neonatal care are particular­ly alarming. Human milk is important for all babies, but especially those who have the most challengin­g start in life.”

Dr Shenker said the postnatal period was under-resourced before the pandemic and the research demonstrat­ed things had got worse for most new mothers, particular­ly the disadvanta­ged.

She said: “It is time for a national conversati­on to avoid this being replicated as we enter a second wave.”

The research is now published in the Journal of Maternal and Child Nutrition - https:// onlinelibr­ary.wiley.com/ doi/epdf/10.1111/ mcn.13088

The findings highlight a critical gap in support for some breastfeed­ing mothers during the pandemic. It is vital that we work to ensure that highqualit­y infant feeding support continues to be delivered - Professor Amy Brown, Director of the centre of Lactation, Infant Feeding and Translatio­n

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 ??  ?? A new research collaborat­ion led by Swansea University has highlighte­d a lack of highqualit­y breastfeed­ing support for some families during the Covid-19 pandemic.
A new research collaborat­ion led by Swansea University has highlighte­d a lack of highqualit­y breastfeed­ing support for some families during the Covid-19 pandemic.

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